LN ard ci as A RRR USER A han A Your "Dear Anne' Mirst: About that [8 ANNE HIRST | Ply Gunite, * toes. When you finally promised" Modern Etiquette By Roberta Lege Q. Is it proper for an unmarried woman to attach the title of "Miss" to her name when signing.a letter? A. Only if the title is enclosed \ spend an hour's agony of indeci- sion" over which of several suits her best. 'Yet a Fatalist would argue that all her anxiety is wasted; that A 'woman buying a hat may Is Future Determined Before Birth? This would account for the bond of sympathy that exists between them. It explains why twins think and feel alike, have the same hopes and desires. It's "girl ¥ho Sant hold her pan, 1 n ho Sean ple dete e bi in parentheses, a3, "(Miss) Ruth her final selection is predestined the "answer to the strange tele- ina similar situation, I haven't now he is paintihg a true picture Thomnson.", Generally, if the wri- even hetore. she caters. the: hat pathy that exists between pretty 3 given up.'the o} iid hie you would lead as «| ter signg her name merely" Ruth i! " sliop! rg JC =| twin American' singing sisters Mare is wee. HIT for. there are several men I could have. But. there's only one I worry about." "For a year and a half, we've 4 heen secing each _other all the time. But for some months, ls attitude has changed, He still says he loves me, and one day we'll be married. But----- "He is not even affectionate any more. And I'ni lucky if 1 see him once a week! When we go out, he is in a hurry to get me horie early, so he can pal around with his. men friends till all hours, And he's with them every night! "AM I SELFISH?" "They seem to be my only com- petition. I don't object to them at all. But if he'd pay half as much attention to me, Ld be so happy!" "Am I being selfish? I don't want to be. i CONFUSED" No wonder you worry! When a man feels he has to say he "still" loves you, and "some day" he'll marry you, a girl. should realize that their romance is withering before her eyes. Unless she can revive his com- plete devotion and his need of her! the end is, not far off. So long as this man, was un-- certain. of you, he was on his LE RE A AE IE IE YoutY | Omeyard || "4718 ; : of the faith of Israclites jn Je- I Sr . as a single match might split, leav- gmall sige S--14--16 hovah. But the walls fell when the i Feady, tir, Ce " . Need Extra Care ing two matches of identical wood. M--18-20 people had made their thirteenth ' i : vos So are the very bodies and minds bs i trip around the city and had shout- Next : an the. ha cashalitics Ti | ) f 3 of identical twins of the same iy. ria lows ed and the priests had blown their ass warming pad. ut that could- ihe shoey 30 c toe Jor your grain, 2h ; trumpets. The incident encouraged n't be fixed and since it has be- guaren now, selp-to: build strong, E on tom » "ONE yard of 35%nch for the the Israelites and struck terror to come a-pocossity around here there healthy fect when they grow up. - i: small size! Little more for the the hearts of the Canaanites. was nothing for it but to buy a On the other hand, poorly fitted, er other! As shown in diagram this apron is ONE piece plus ties and hope of marry- "« Tan you believe he would be more attentive then? No girl in' love wants fo. play sceond fiddle, If he is so 'de- pendent upon his friends, he should not marry anybody. It is his choice to make--but the girl CE EE SS SS and force if I cannot know, of course, why this man's affection has dimin- ished. 'There could be several rea- sons. It is certain that he now feels he can neglect you with Jmpunity, go his own way, and be sure he will find you waiting when he chooses to come around. --\Whil¢ you wear your heart out, worrying, Now let him worry, Go out with these other men who are cager to take you, and leave him free to be with his friends. Miss- mg you as he will, and alarmed by the competition he faces, he will - discover how 'much you really mean to him, Whether you mean all, or noth- ing, you have the right to know. Anything is better than this tur- bulent anxiety you are suffering now. * * « Some men want to have their cake and eat it too. No self-res- pecting girl will permit that for long . .. If this situation worries you, write to Anne Hirst. Address her at Box 1, 123 Eighteenth St. New Toronto, Ont. A A - UINDAY SCHOOL 5 |LSSON By Rev. R. B, Warren, B.A. B.D. rs NG: * Ir The Conquest of Canaan Joshua 1:1-7; 6: 1-5, 20. Memory Selection: As I was with Moses, so I will be with thee.-- © Joshua 1: 5, 6. Joshua and Caleb were the only adults who left Egypt and were privileged to enter Canaan. Jo- shua successfully led Israel in its first encounter with the Amalekites while Aaron and Hur were the two faithful spies who recommend- may "have to take -a firm stand - a Thompson," it is taken for granted that she is anmarried. However, if she wishes to be sure that the reply to her is addressed properly, - she will [include the title as above. Yok * * Q. Is it necessary to write any- thing on the card that accompanies . a wedding gift? ' A. No; the card is sufficient, as good wishes and congratulations are offered at the reception, * * * Q. Is it really all right for a woman to offer her hand to a man to whom she i being introduced? A. Although this is not often done, there is really nothing im- proper about the gesture if" the woman is sincerely pleased over the meeting. + * *. = ¥ Q. Is the fashion of "cutting in" at a dance considered good . taste? A. To my way of thinking, it is" rude and irritating to a couple who may be enjoying that particular dance, However, some girls like it as an indication of their popular- ity, and the custom is generally accepted by polite society. * + * Q. If a man is walking with a woman and someone who is a stranger to him bows to his com- panion, should he also return salu- tation? oe . A. Yes, always, by lifting his hat. 4 * * * Q. When a bride has no family, near relatives, or guardian, who should defray her portion of the wedding expenses? - A. The bride must meet expenses herself. And, of course, the size of her wedding depends upon the size of her purse. . * * * Q. When the bride marries in a travelling dress or suit, what does the bridegroom wear? "A Any ordinary dark' business suit, or one that is appropriate for travelling, with perhaps a single white flower from the bride's cor- sage in his lapel. : * » * Q. When there is an item on a restaurant or hotel menu which one does not understand, is it all right to ask the waiter about it? these Crochet King--George Link, 49-year-old oil company foreman. of Bunker Hill, was named nation's champ crochet artist. Link, who does most of his crocheting in a bar ("my friends are used to it"), shows his prize-winning white tablecloth. Ee ( CSS eg : HRONICLES JGINGERFARM Gwendoline D Clarke [t is grand to have all kinds of electrical conveniences -- and of course once you get used to them you wouldn't want to be without them. But one thing is certain-- the more things vou have to work with the more things there are .to go wrong. Right now I could write a pretty good story on "The In- convenience of Conveniences." Just about everything that could go wrong has gone wrong around here during the last few weeks. And trying te get anything fixed is a with the vacuum tube--standing a little distance away so as to .re-- duce the "air current. And the clock has been ficking merrily ever since. x x * . Come to think of it, most of our. - worries occurred Jast- weck--elec- tion week--maybe that accounts for all the trouble. Certainly the air was charged enough to upset the balance of any intricate contrap- tion. I'll leave it at that! * * * One thing around works "perfectly is an old-fashioned octagon-shaped wooden mouse trap in which I have caught 14 moose mice during the last week. And still they come. I believe they come in from the field as fast as I catch them in the house. "Joe is quite: ready to eat the mice once I have caught them but he would" much rather hunt them in the field than sit waiting for them to come here _that _ That's also tlie Mohamniedan's belief. Whatever befails him, good or bad, he 'attributes to fate--Kis- met--against which he considers it a fearless soldier, but a lazy work- er. For he fights on the theory that if a bullet "has his name on it," it might just as well find him a hero 'in the front rank as skulking in the rear. The same argument holds in his daily life. Why slave and toil when his destiny is al- ready "in the bag"? If he is doom- ed to starve, then starve he will writes. Deret Barat in '"I'it-Bits." Scientists have long scoffed at such notions. Yet they are borne out remarkably from time to time by strange examples of "identical twins," whose lives 'have 'mysteri- ously followed an exactly similar course--although the individuals concerned may have been separated from birth, unaware even of each other's existence. Edwin and Fred Nestor were but separated as babies. Unknown to each other, they lived exactly similar lives. Both married girls of the same weight, coloring. and height--and from the same town. They both became fathers of sons at the same age, and each followed the same career of electrical en- gineering. But perhaps the most astonishing and inexplicable factor of all is that when 'the twins were finally re-united as. grown men (and even their wives couldn't tell them apart) they each owned identical fox ter- rier pets--named Trixie! : One day a seventy-year-old car- penter .was admitted -to a Massa- chusetts hospital with stomach trouble, later diagnosed as a dread discase. The surgeons noticed, in- cidentally, that the old feltow's nose that he had been unsuccessfully for his life and operated on _ hernia. Imagine their amazement, there- fore, when another carpenter, scy- enty years old, also with signs of a broken nose and an unsuccess- ful hernia" operation, was admitted "to the hospital. He was an identical twin of the first patient; and he had precisely the same 'symptoms useless to struggle. It makes him identical twins, born in Nebraska . = had been broken at some time in ian and Mary Wild, who kept se _ parate diaries , . , until one day they compared them and discovered that what they had written corres. # ponded almost word for word, Af. ter that théy saved their energies: kept one diary and wrote it up on alternate days! SPLITTING And the RELIEF IS LASTING For fast relief from headache get INSTANTINE. For real relief get INSTANTINE. For prolonged relief get INSTANTINE! . Yes, more people every day are finding that INSTANTINE is one thing to ease pain fast. For headache, for "rheumatic pain, aches and pains of colds, for neuritic or neuralgic pain you can depend on INSTANTINE to bring you quick comfort. INSTANTINE is made like a pres. cription of three proven medical ingredients. A single 4G tablet usually brings fast relief, Get Instantine today and always keep it handy < Jhsta identical' + \ HedlgwE «| *d that Israel .go up and possess . nightmare. id : of disease. ¥ he Tad, He Bocas a A to A. Yes. Only a timid person aE ot of hiding in he Darts. And Do examples like these bear out 12-Tablet Tin 25¢ . tate : - s use-hu ; i? : : v : Moses. On the death of Moses he would hesitate le do $0, First of all the radio went dead. She opetels hours ise hunt he iy the "what is to be will be" argu- Economical 48-Tablet Bottle 75¢_ became the servant of the LORD and assumed the leadership of Is- y : . the radio fellow, "leave it here-- Tati ; ate individual lives, follow such Upsidedown to Prevent Peeking rael. When they crossed the Jordan acknowledge receipt of 2 gift? we'll look after it in a day or frou. digging files, Druin exactly similar paths from cradle they came to the walled fortress of A. This is not the best form. two." 8 4 aan 8 to grave, one is led seriously to Jericho. The manner in which the city was taken was unique. God, as the efficient cause, was magnified of proceeding so unmilitary and ap- parently absurd was a severe test The next encounter ended in de- feat. Covetous Achan had appro- Q. May one use to telephone to Nothing can take the place of that personally written note of thanks. et + * * I took it downtown. "Okay," daid « * * "A day or two!" 1 repeated, "for goodness' sake, it won't take more really worked. In fifteen minutes I was out of the store with the radio under my arm all fixed up and new. one. Ths a Ld * ture field snooping along the on her head until all we can see is "her hindquarters above the ground. When she gets tried she comes home -- dirty and happy -- little' is introduced to the cellar. Children's Feet 'improper footwear can so deform children's feet that they are sure ment? When two men, living separ- consider that 'perhaps all our des- tinies are determined at birth. It is, of course, only with identical since they are born of the same germ cell which has divided, just § Bakings Easier, Speeder pockets. You could give MORI priated an accursed garment and ol i something happened to our Skew. the misery of foot traubles : : ifts this year if you use this and stolen gold and silver that was ouside >. the three-way switch Ne : A 1 WwW ron pattern It will conserve to have oe given to God Thirty- that operates the pole light would- If keeping up with growing feet . with onderful New Fast Rising Dry Yeast! your fabric, money and time. Pattern 4718 comes in sizes small 14, 16; medium 18, 20. Small size takes one vard 35-inch. * This pattern easy to use, simple to sew, is tested for fit. Has com- plete illustrated instructions, Send THIRTY-FIVE CENTS (35¢) in' coins (stamps cannot be _accepted) for this pattern. Print plainly SIZE, NAME, ADDRESS, six men were killed. The wicked one was discovered and he, his family and his property destroyed. Among the events of special in- terest are the deceit of the Gideon- ites, and the:sun and moon standing Ltill as Joshua continued the battle. Truly Joshua proved God's promise, "As I was with Moses, so | will be with thee," to be true. God buries His workmen but carries on n't work. Neither would the light over the front door. And it wasn't a burnt out bulb in either case. It was ten days before we could get a man in to fix them--about half an hour's work. While the clec- trician was here I gét him to look at our clectric kéttle--the plug used to get so hot we could smell the rubber. He finally put on a new --plug-nfter-diseovering--the--old--one-- cuts holes in your budget, skimp on other items of clothing. Noth- ing does more to "spoil the foot 'than ill-fitting shoes. 'Even with the right fit, a young child 'may grow out of a size in a month. . Until the age of fifteen, . the average child grows out of a shoe. size in anywhere from one to six months. nShoes----should--be--about --three--- CINNAMON BUNS 'Measure into large bowl, 1 c. lukewarm water, 2 tsps. granu- lated sugar; stir until sugar . is dissolved. Sprinkle with 2 ' envelopes Fleischmann's Fast Rising Dry Yeast. Let stand 10 4 " Mai rE Wa had almost burnt. through from quarters of an inch longer than the min, THEN stir well. Scald 1 c. STYLE NUMBER. His work. Ie never wearies! How the inside. With a solid rubber longest toe, leather should hug ats milk and stir in V2 c. granulated Send order to Box 1, 123 Eigh- teenth Street; New Toronto, Ont, comforting to realize that the same God is ours today. 9 Narrow inlet 35. Card game plug it is impossible to tell what is happening. 1 am telling you this as a warning . .. no one can be too "carcful with electrical appli- heels, To be sure shoe is wide enough, pinch leather. across toes. If it won't lift, shoe is narrow. Don't let a child wear hand-me- sugar, 14 tsps. salt;6 ths. shortening; cool to lukewarm. Add to yeast mix- ture: and stir in 2 well-beaten CRE. Stir in 3 c. oncd-sifted bread flour; - beat until smooth, Wofk in 3 ¢ more , once-sifted bread flour, Knead until before all men. His ark and his Q.- Is. it proper to partake of ~ i . i Le twins that this theory can be miiisters, by tiniy protrinons, o water, tea or' coffee at the table Pjshsigs Day i put in 3 now chimps of dry a Metin to her tested. ¥ the head of the procession, were while there is food in the mouth? He ony Sue k lat I u ats ay bi yieh 80 CACl-£ oe aver is Nor must identical twins be con- especially honored in the gyes of A. No; the food should be swal- hii) hi ! 3 L" hid A 18 Way 901 a3 I. she Ll shod with fused with ordinary twins. They are T Istuclite and Canaanite, The conres Jowed hefore taking any liquid, te radio acted." My indignation horse-shoes.. At which stage she far rarer, virtually "soul-mates" "y ° "10. Peculiar 38. Whole ances. But I wonder how many fires down shoes (even if they're hardly smooth and elastics place in greased CROSSWORD 11. Tiny' Hi Hush} ciimp have been started by using some- worn), unless you are sure the bowl; brush top with melted butter PUZZLE 17. Silad dressing (6 Old name for thing that needed fixing--but which shoes meet the above requirements, oe hertening. Cover and ext in a HH Ba ritk 48 ein wagon ys " nobody had time to fix. There is This js' a st, Low-cut, laced rise until doubled in bulk, While H 22. Bind fear 9 Southern i N ARES some talk these days of unemploy- exfopds are still the. hesteuin Joke _ dough is rising, combine 1%2 ¢. brown a BRE RR ERNE SE Hy ment---but there seems no sign of | and in construction. If you choose Tpsveae fishy presets downy 3 une 6. Astern 4 Handle 26. Fat 51. Large wine 4, it when anyone wants a job done. shoes with straps, the straps should A. dried seedless raisi s. Punch down -» * 5 Black bird $-Totirely Ph Mohammedan ca Shek C : W Q AHI ea be placed so they give the same dough and divide into 2 equal por: 3 13 Pasture 7 Pack down. © 28. Snel St, piyimalrve aura We thought we had come to the kind of support around the instep | + tions} form into smooth balls, Roll i 14 Military 8 Precentor 31. Mark:of a blow §5 Collection end of our :"fixing" troubles and that lacing would. oa Cash Discs into an oblooy Yo hick 15 Trianguiar Jr 13 1s EEES Te |7 8 |9 vo yi LOOK! You'll want these Pixie then tonight my typewriter Started zm : a with' melted Butter or ponding 16 Inet hk is : . Slippers to go with your lounge acting upso things don't have to : Sprinkle with raisig mixture, Begin. i 18 Short-napped _ | i ¥ robe! So comfortable, so. casy to be electrified to .give trouble. This RELIEVE foe at 3 Jong edger toll un each Piste, 20 I h is : [73 1 17 make if you use quilted fabric. 4 time I didn't wait for a mechanic, "17 slices. Place just touching pis 2. Fuss oe - Slippers -- three pattern pieces! I turned the typewriter upside COUGHS other, a cut-side up, in greased 7" 26, Confined 109 18 19 20 Pattern 667; transfer embroidery; down, watched to see which levers f + found layes-seke pans (or other shal, 29. Fal behina : slipper pattern; small, medium, did what, found where they ivere and COLDS let rise until doubled in bulk, Dake 30. Alresh capital uy m 3B 5 large, extra large sizes,' sticking and then brushed them IS SiMpLL in moderate oven, 350°, 20.25 minutes, 33. Literary i) % 5 31 Send TWENTY-FIVE CENTS lightly with oil. That's all and now 4th a Serve hot, or reheated, 84 HAR mente \ in coins (stamps cannot be ad it works, | lind Y " 36. Scarlet 33 TY 15 3 | cepted) for this pattern to Box 1, * * * 8 arm clichic OF ' 31. Particle 3 : ; . 123 Eighteenth St, New. Toronto, Oh, but I mustn't forget to tell poe foobulb ® No more taking chances with 4 Konten pin n I I) 39 Ont. = Print plainly PATTERN | you about the clock! We have a' . Gover with worm perishable yeast cakes that have lost 41. Smell NUMBER, your NAME and AD- very nice little 8-day travelling for leavening power] New {8 Peam atgre id JR DRESS, eh : | clock that was given us as a wed- §, Sheciiva for. children Fleischmann's Past DRY Yeast a Hindu cymbals rg Such a colorful roundup of | ding present. Last week it got tired USED FOR 83 YEARS keeps full sgrength and active right : Bate] be ne: Christmas ideas! Send twenty-five' | and would go only for about five CHEST RUB till the moment you use jt, Needs §3, Nok 80 meh 5 [5 cents for our new Laura Wheeler | minutes at a time. Since it would INSIST A NO reftigeration -- keeps safely } 8: Nangll : 3 Needlecraft Catalogue, Choose pat- run that length of time I concluded We WON wi A in your cupboacd, Tey Its matvellons H partof the lex 57 terns for your Christmas gift-mak- there was nothing broken and that | results in your next baking, - : id x of . : ww ; ing from the gaily iNustated Nin inavhe it toighe be parities of fast or. 1HomAs ECLECTRIC 011 d ; 0.5 measure x dol ousc¢hold and personal ae- stopping the delicate mechanism. ; . ' d i. bl siand : ox Soetarics yi a Free Pattern 1s | So I set the clock on a chair, open- Orter o months suo / _ 1.Denve mist Answer Elsewhere on This Page printed right in the book. . od up the back, and blew into it ISSUE 50 -- 1951 --